Drones used for first time in major search at Grand Canyon


              This Sunday, April 16, 2017, photo provided by the National Park Service shows Tapeats Creek in Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona. Authorities are searching for Jackson Standefer, 14, and Lou-Ann Merrell, 62, after the pair lost their footing Saturday and fell into the water during a family trip in a remote area of the Arizona park. (National Park Service via AP)
This Sunday, April 16, 2017, photo provided by the National Park Service shows Tapeats Creek in Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona. Authorities are searching for Jackson Standefer, 14, and Lou-Ann Merrell, 62, after the pair lost their footing Saturday and fell into the water during a family trip in a remote area of the Arizona park. (National Park Service via AP)

PHOENIX (AP) - The desperate search for two people who disappeared at the bottom of the Grand Canyon last weekend marked the National Park Service's most extensive use yet of drones for a search-and-rescue operation.

The Grand Canyon is the only national park to have its own fleet of unmanned aircraft for finding people. It has five drones, capable of peering into crevices and other places unreachable on foot.

Operating drones is also considered safer than sending rangers up in helicopters.

Still, the drones were unable to find the woman and teenage boy who vanished while crossing a creek, and the search has been scaled back.

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